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  <isbn>0140447539</isbn>
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    <![CDATA[L'Assommoir (The Dram Shop) (Les Rougon-Macquart, #7) (Penguin Classics)]]>
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    <![CDATA[Not realism, but filth; not crudity, but pornography, is how one contemporary critic described <em>L'Assommoir</em>. The seventh novel in Les Rougon-Macquart cycle, it is Zola's monumental natural and social history of a family under the Second Empire. The story of a good-hearted, but weak-willed and vulnerable laundress, L'Assommoir is widely regarded as Zola's masterpiece and was an immediate sensation, selling 50,000 copies within a year of its publication in 1877. This edition includes Zola's response to critics who denounced his work as immoral.<br/><br/>Written in gritty street language and unflinchingly portraying the darker side of French culture and society, <em>L'Assommoir</em> transcends Zola's stated intention to expose the powerful effects of heredity and environment on the human condition and, as Robin Buss writes in his Introduction, is marvelous, warm and human...with a tragic heroine who is among the most touching and credible creations in all the literature of the nineteenth century.]]>
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        <name><![CDATA[Émile Zola]]></name>
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  </authors>  <published>1876</published>
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  <date_added>Thu Sep 03 03:03:14 -0700 2009</date_added>
  <date_updated>Sun Nov 01 09:32:30 -0800 2009</date_updated>
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